Updated
Updated · Financial Times · Jun 1
Global Asset Managers Capture 0.1% of China’s Rmb36.5tn Fund Market in 5 Years
Updated
Updated · Financial Times · Jun 1

Global Asset Managers Capture 0.1% of China’s Rmb36.5tn Fund Market in 5 Years

1 articles · Updated · Financial Times · Jun 1
  • Rmb34bn is all six wholly owned foreign mutual fund houses have gathered in China since 2020, despite roughly $800mn of investment and Beijing’s ownership liberalization.
  • Distribution hurdles, weak brand recognition, fierce local competition, worsening US-China relations and China’s property slump have all slowed growth, leaving many firms below Z-Ben’s Rmb25bn break-even threshold.
  • Neuberger leads the group with more than Rmb14bn at end-March—later rising to Rmb19bn—followed by BlackRock at Rmb11bn and Fidelity at Rmb4bn; the other three manage far less.
  • Schroders has already decided to exit its mainland mutual fund business after three years, transferring three funds and an investment team to Neuberger while keeping a China presence through joint ventures.
  • Foreign managers that expanded by buying out Chinese joint-venture partners have fared better, amassing about Rmb373bn, or roughly 1% of the market—still a small share of China’s Rmb36.5tn industry.
Schroders' exit signals failure, but others thrive. What is the real key to cracking China's state-run market?
As China's property crisis erases household wealth, is the market for foreign investment funds already gone?
Amid rising US-China tensions, is Beijing's financial market a calculated trap for Western capital?